The FHA Hope For Homeowners program was designed for existing homeowners, struggling with mortgage payments and an “upside-down” equity position in their primary residence. It is a new program with lots of misinformation. Some believe it can only be offered by existing loan servicers, some think only participating lender/servicers can offer the program, and few are certain if the program will be offered through mortgage brokers.
I discussed the key components of the FHA Hope For Homeowners loan program on Mortgages Unzipped. They are are not limited to but include:
- An appraisal will be performed and the maximum loan amount will be 90% of that appraised value. All subordinate liens will be extinguished and the exiting lienholder will have to agree to a loss of principal.
- The current housing payment must be more than 31% of the homeowner’s gross monthly income.
- The homeowner must not have misrepresented his/her income on the original loan application.
- The homeowner must get a new 30-year fixed rate loan and qualify based upon documented income.
- The homeowner must agree to an declining equity sharing agreement (for the existing equity), with the FHA, for a specified period of time.
- The homeowner will share in future appreciation with the FHA.
- The program is completely voluntary; existing lienholders don’t have to participate.
This article isn’t about whether the Hope for Homeowners program is a “good” idea. I believe that the future of mortgage refinancing lies in the immediate reality that lenders will accept short payoffs for refinance loans in addition to resale transactions. Robert Kerr made a comment, about a year ago, about the morality of loan modifications and suggested that lenders should “mark-to-the market”and accept lower balances to be commensurate with declined valuations. That comment inspired my semi-satirical recommendation of short payoffs, cross-collateralized against the net present value of government retirement entitlements. Robert made me think that the moral is the practical.
Will the investors play ball? One lender, acquired at the tail of the sub-prime boom, sold its entire loan portfolio for about 22 cents on the dollar this past summer. This means that a $300,000, 100% financing home loan, made in 2005, was bought for $75,000. Read more